I hope he gets the compensation soon, but as you say that won't cover the vets bill.I see there is plenty of room for green spots in UK.
We do have problems regarding the wolves, but they are not overwhelming (some farmers may disagree on that). If we compare the number of livestock killed by wolves to the wolf population the worst problems are actually where the wolf population is thin.
Jørgen who lost the 6 sheep last week is now waiting for compensation, paid out after DNA sample confirms it was a wolf. He will only get compensation for the killed sheep. The vet bill is his own, and those vets take good payment for their trade (I know because I used to be married to one).
Last year at the town of Bække a sheep farmer lost 35 sheep to a single wolf during 1 night, but cases like this is luckily seldom, so much for killing only the weak and what they eat.
The wolf here is not reintroduced, but came back by itself, and I don’t say we should kill them all, but a general system of regulation, like they have in Sweden, would make good sense, and reintroduce the fear of humans.
At the place “Klosterheden” they have a pack of 10 wolves, in an area with a lot of red deer, and therefor a lot of hunting, many driven hunts a year including Royal family driven hunts. Somehow, the wolves in that area have learned to fear of humans.
If there where a system of regulating the wolf population like they have in Sweden I think they would become fearful of humans, and that way solve most of our wolf problems.
Where I live, we have an 8-wolf pack, and they don’t really have fear of humans, maybe because this area don’t get hunted so intensive as “Klosterheden”. We se attacks on livestock regularly, but so far never from the pack, but rather individuals.
You seem quite self-centered. Basically the only thing he did wrong was jeopardize YOUR hunting...Absolute b**locks.
He broke the law in at least two ways and he got everything he deserved.
Do what you want in your own back yard but don't do it in mine and jeopardize my hunting by being a idiot.
I am not arguing for or against wolves but he broke the law.
EDIT: (typo in above, neither -> either)What is not just and reasonable, cannot either be a law.
I disagree. It doesn't just affect me it potentially affects the way Danes look at all hunters, but why shouldn't I be personally annoyed that he broke the law and adversely affected the way some people think of me?You seem quite self-centered. Basically the only thing he did wrong was jeopardize YOUR hunting...
While you're in Denmark, in Swedish kingdom (including Finland) in the 1500s there was a prominent figure in teology, legislation and so on, Olaus Petri, who wrote a set of informal "instructions for judges". They're still printed in Finnish (and maybe Swedish) legal books as foreword / reference. One of the most known is roughly translated:
EDIT: (typo in above, neither -> either)
9. What is not just and fair cannot be law either; for it is on account of the fairness which dwells in the law that the law is accepted.
Sorry to hear about your friend's sheep. I think the government will have to do something about controlling some of the wolves when they become a problem. I just saw this morning that a third of sheep farmers near Oksbøl have lost sheep.Torben, who where so ”lucky” only to loose 6 sheep less than 2 weeks ago had another visit from, at least one, wolf last night.
This morning 9 dead sheep, and still no number of wounded sheep, the vet is on the way. He is now contemplating giving up, but not an easy decision to give up on his family farm, trough 5 generations.
Over the last 2 years he now lost 110 sheep including the 9 from this morning, he has special fences, special dogs, and special strobe lights, special frequency noisemakers, but the wolves just don’t know they are supposed to be afraid of those things.
The dogs have a certain effect, but they are very expensive to keep, and aggressive towards people who get close to the sheep, so dogwalkers and nature lovers complain about them.
On the other hand, several incidents where wolves have come very close to dogwalkers (2 meters) have led to them being afraid of the wolves too. culminating 16. January where a dog was attacked and badly injured in front of the owner, who luckily managed to chase the wolf away, before the dog was killed.
Hope the law opens for a regulation of the wolves soon, but as far I hear it is the EU who forbids us to make such a law here in Denmark.
You have water around your island as a natural barrier, don’t fall for the people who wants to “rewild” wolves in UK, they are not shy of humans and don’t just kill what they need to live.
Star attraction at the local petting zoo?The wolf that attacked and bit a woman in Hamburg some time ago was, according to the news, captured alive.
Do you know what the authorities have done to that particular wolf?
After the incident with the injured woman, the wolf was sighted in St. Pauli, on Feldstrasse, and near the exhibition halls. Police officers then spotted it swimming in the Inner Alster Lake. They pulled it out of the water with a noose.@Bavarianbrit
The wolf that attacked and bit a woman in Hamburg some time ago was, according to the news, captured alive.
Do you know what the authorities have done to that particular wolf?
There isn't a big enough facepalm emoji for this.After the incident with the injured woman, the wolf was sighted in St. Pauli, on Feldstrasse, and near the exhibition halls. Police officers then spotted it swimming in the Inner Alster Lake. They pulled it out of the water with a noose.
The animal initially resisted arrest at the construction site of the former "Alex" bar, but additional police officers with shields kept it at bay for over an hour.
The head of the urban hunting department at the Altona district office then took charge of the wolf, along with a veterinarian. The animal is doing well. It's agitated and needs to calm down, he told NDR radio on site.
Experts transported the wolf to the Klövensteen Wildlife Park that same evening in a wildlife transport vehicle. The animal is to be released back into the wild at a later date. However, when and where exactly that will happen is still unknown. "The wolf is really scared and stressed right now. We recommend releasing the wolf in a sparsely populated area," says Christian Erdmann from the Wildlife and Species Conservation Center. "Provided the veterinarian has given the animal a clean bill of health."